The COVID Response: What We Got Wrong

Another Finding That Contradicts the CDC Narrative 

Several of my friends (and perhaps hundreds of my readers) think my take on COVID is crazy, as in conspiratorial. Trusting the mainstream media implicitly, they send me clips or links now and then that support their view: COVID was a huge pandemic that killed millions. And were it not for the vaccines, we would still be in the midst of plague-level mortality, as we were from the end of 2019 to the end of 2022.

Usually, what they send me are statements and reports that I’m already familiar with – and which have been refuted so thoroughly that I don’t have the heart to tell them.

Sometimes, when the information they send me is more recent, I take the time to check it out.

The latest such info I got was several links to statements from the CDC about how, even though the vaccines aren’t “100% effective,” getting a full and complete round of the recommended vaccines has been proven to lower the risk of contracting COVID again.

Based on the history of how poorly the vaccines have done so far, I was doubtful about this “new” finding. So, I did some research. And what I found was that the data shows that this information (which turned out to be based on old CDC claims) was not only wrong, but doubly wrong.

A substantial study by the Cleveland Clinic on the effect of getting all as opposed to just some of the CDC-recommended vaccines found that those people that had fewer vaccinations actually had less chance of contracting the virus.

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